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Mark 1/4" for hand piecing?
Hello y'all. I've just recently discovered the unbelievably wonderful Scrappy Quilt Show thread. I've gone through about 100 pages of it so far, and I'm very motivated to start using the 2" squares I've been accumulating for the past few months. I'd like to make it a hand-piecing carry-along project, but would appreciate advice from you Hand-Piecers on whether you mark the 1/4" allowance for your seams when sewing together those tiny pieces, and if you do what's a good carry-along method for doing it? Thanks for any help you can provide.
I just want to add that I think this board is so terrific. I'm a fairly new quilter but I've started to bring lots of new ideas that I've learned here to my quilting group at home. (e.g., just did the board sandwiching method, and ready to try Elmer's) |
In the past I have used 1/4" masking tape if thats any help
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Originally Posted by janedee
(Post 5990924)
In the past I have used 1/4" masking tape if thats any help
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Yes you can reuse the same piece several times, it will loose its stickyness, like you I did 2" squares to start with, all scrappy, I made them into blocks using 12 squares across and down as I wasn't sure if I was going to break up the blocks with sashing, in the end I just joined them all together, came in very handy when I had to sit around waiting for my daughters doing there various activities and of course travelling in the car - hope you have fun with it
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Many like to do English Paper piecing hexagons as a take along protect.
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I usually try to mark them using a small ruler. It makes an accurate seam so much easier especially while riding in a car.
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I do usually mark them. I just carve out a block of time to do a lot of it at once so I don't have to do it again for a while. :)
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Originally Posted by janedee
(Post 5990954)
Yes you can reuse the same piece several times, it will loose its stickyness, like you I did 2" squares to start with, all scrappy, I made them into blocks using 12 squares across and down as I wasn't sure if I was going to break up the blocks with sashing, in the end I just joined them all together, came in very handy when I had to sit around waiting for my daughters doing there various activities and of course travelling in the car - hope you have fun with it
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Originally Posted by OCquilter
(Post 5990974)
I usually try to mark them using a small ruler. It makes an accurate seam so much easier especially while riding in a car.
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Originally Posted by JulieR
(Post 5991032)
I do usually mark them. I just carve out a block of time to do a lot of it at once so I don't have to do it again for a while. :)
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Originally Posted by Tartan
(Post 5990963)
Many like to do English Paper piecing hexagons as a take along protect.
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Originally Posted by IQ2
(Post 5991086)
Thanks for the suggestion, Tartan. I do have some Grandmother's Garden blocks completed, but you know how it goes...so many ideas, so little time! I'm ready to move on to the 2" square scrappy.
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Traditionally, before rotary cutters and such, we made a template of the finished size of the patch (whether square, triangle, hexagon, etc.) Trace around the template, then cut out. It didn't matter if you cut an exact 1/4" outside the line, as the size of the finished patch was what mattered, not the size of the seam allowance. This was back when I only had scissors to cut with. Oh my gosh, this makes me sound so old!! :eek:
I used to make my templates out of old greeting cards. But they will start to change size after being traced around many times. So now I would use template plastic instead. Or you could use the top of a cottage cheese container I suppose. Andi |
That is also how I learned it. For hand piecing, mark the seam line. For machine piecing, cut with a 1/4" seam allowance. Hand piecing does not require the same kind of accuracy in cutting; the accuracy comes from sewing on the marked seam line.
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If the fabric finger-presses easily, I'd just take a finished-size template along. Posterboard will last awhile tho not as long as plastic.
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Years ago I checked out a video from the library by Jinny Beyer, who is well-known for her hand piecing. It's well worth checking your library to see if you can find her DVD. I think it's available on Amazon too, but really you need to watch it only once or twice. She does not mark her 1/4" seams, plus she has a very fast way of piecing that she demonstrates (basically moving the fabric onto the needle).
Some quilters use a small piece of tape on a fingernail that is marked with 1/4" from the edge. I think Tiger Tape is 1/4" wide; you could just snip off a small piece of that to put on a fingernail. If you do mark, a mechanical pencil provides a more accurate line, and you would want to keep the marking light. |
thanks for all of the wonderful suggestions
As usual, the QB came through! Thank you all for your advice and suggestions. I'm going to have to try each of them and see what works for me. The ruler, the tape, the template...all great.
Andi--I checked my library on line but they don't have any Jinny Beyer DVD's. She did recently show soft edge applique on her newsletter and I saw her hand-stitching moving the fabric rather than the needle the way you said, but that was applique and I didn't see her seams being stitched. |
I have seen several vintage quilt tops that were hand pieced and had pencil markings for the seam allowance.
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I have never marked seam allowances when hand piecing. Initially my seams were a bit too narrow but with time I just learned to eyeball it and get pretty close to a 1/4" seam. The main thing is consistency. As long as your seam is the same every time your quilt will fit together properly.
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